
The site offers articles, songs and videos to stream from bands as diverse as the poppy Moscow-based My Michelle (a Beatles reference?) that Iman was mentioning yesterday, Love-Fine, a much darker electropunk band, which is catalogued as ‘Tatar-Disco’, a sort of heavy electro-disco inducing trance when played loud in a Kazan discotheque on a cold Saturday night.
But the bands coming from far East are more numerous than I had imagined, there is Vladimir resident Daniil Vavilov, aka Fill and Bulb, who composes music sounding like a space odyssey movie soundtrack, or an ambient calming landscape that makes you travel into your own imagination, or, in the same vein Eja/Yoj’, whose compositions make you want hibernate or sleep forever. ‘The title of this release speaks for itself; have a pleasant flight!’
And if you are into the electronica-random-ambient type, Fedor Pereversev, aka Moa Pillar produces music with ‘futuristic beats, mixed with heavyweight basslines and ethnic samples’.
There is a lot to explore on this website, like beatmaker Pixelord whose music sounds like a video game,… Bollywoodish RJB,… pop-punk Narkotiki (NRKTK) whose I could not understand the lyrics of course, but said to be inspired by 90s grunge, 70s punk and all kinds of Japanese things,… synth-pop Tiptoptellix,… jazz chanteuse Sasha Almazova,… jazz-hip-hop OU74,… SunMan24, and many many more.
I could not explore all the artist pages, there are a million of them, from Lithuanian ambient composers, Russian techno makers, Indie rockers from the Black sea, Siberian hip-hopers, hushed music makers from Lithuania, Belarusian drum and bass composers, Moscow-based noisy guitarists, more techno or distortion artists from Moscow, Bossa Nova composers from the Balkans, prog and art rockers, gentle electro-acoustic players, Indie folk rockers …
The diversity is endless, and you could easily spend the whole day exploring all the genres flourishing on a territory covering an impressive total of ten time zones.
http://www.farfrommoscow.com/